Search results for "Evolutionarily stable strategy"

showing 9 items of 9 documents

Opportunity costs resulting from scramble competition within the choosy sex severely impair mate choosiness.

2016

12 pages; International audience; Studies on mate choice mainly focus on the evolution of signals that would maximize the probability of finding a good-quality partner. Most models of sexual selection rely on the implicit assumption that individuals can freely compare and spot the best mates in a heterogeneous population. Comparatively few studies have investigated the consequences of the mate-sampling process. Several sampling strategies have been studied from theoretical or experimental perspectives. They belong to two families of decision rules: best-of-n strategies (individuals sample n partners before choosing the best one within this pool) or threshold strategies (individuals sequenti…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineOpportunity costmate-sampling strategyPopulationSample (statistics)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEvolutionarily stable strategy03 medical and health sciences[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisEconometricseducationintrasexual competitionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologyeducation.field_of_studythreshold decision rulechoosinessDecision rule030104 developmental biologyMate choiceSexual selectionAnimal Science and Zoologyopportunity costs[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyPsychologyScramble competitionSocial psychology[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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Does evolution of iteroparous and semelparous reproduction call for spatially structured systems?

2000

A persistent question in the evolution of life histories is the fitness trade-off between reproducing only once (semelparity) in a lifetime or reproducing repeated times in different seasons (iteroparity). The problem can be formulated into a research agenda by assuming that one reproductive strategy is resident (has already evolved) and by asking whether invasion (evolution) of an alternative reproductive strategy is possible. For a spatially nonstructured system, Bulmer (1994) derived the relationship v + PA1 (PA is adult survival; vbS and bS are offspring numbers for iteroparous and semelparous breeding strategies, respectively) at which semelparous population cannot be invaded by an ite…

0106 biological sciencesMaleReproduction (economics)PopulationPopulation DynamicsReproductive strategyBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesModels BiologicalEvolutionarily stable strategyGeneticsAnimalseducationSemelparity and iteroparityEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemeducation.field_of_studyEcologyReproductionBiological Evolution010601 ecologyEvolutionary biologyMutationBiological dispersalFemaleStructured systemsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
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Escaping the evolutionary trap: Can size-related contest advantage compensate for juvenile mortality disadvantage when parasitoids develop in unnatur…

2021

Abstract The quality of hosts for a parasitoid wasp may be influenced by attributes such as host size or species, with high quality for successful development usually coincident with high quality for larger offspring. This is not always the case: for the Scelionid wasp Trissolcus basalis, oviposition in eggs of the Brown Marmorated Stink Bug, Halyomorpha halys, rather than of the normal host, the Southern Green Stink Bug, Nezara viridula, leads to lower offspring survival, but survivors can be unusually large. Adult female T. basalis engage in contests for host access. As larger contestants are typically favoured in contests between parasitoids, the larger size of surviving offspring may co…

0106 biological sciencesStatistics and ProbabilityAvian clutch sizeHost specieGreen stink bugWaspsZoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesReproductive valueGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyParasitoid waspHeteropteraAnimalsBrown marmorated stink bugEvolutionarily stable strategyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologySize advantageHost (biology)AnimalApplied MathematicsReproductionfungiGeneral MedicineTrissolcus basalibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionEurope010602 entomologyHalyomorpha halyEvolutionary trapNezara viridulaModeling and SimulationOwnership advantageBrown Marmorated Stink BugFemaleReproductive valueGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesJournal of theoretical biology
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Punishment of polygyny

1999

We investigated the evolution of monogamy (one male, one female) and polygyny (one male, more than one female). In particular, we studied whether it is possible for a mutant polygynous mating strategy to invade a resident population of monogamous breeders and, alternatively, whether a mutant monogamy can invade resident polygyny. Our population obeys discrete-time Ricker dynamics. The role of males and females in the breeding system is incorporated via the harmonic birth function. The results of the invasability analysis are straightforward. Polygyny is an evolutionarily stable strategy mating system; this holds throughout the examined range of numbers of offspring produced per female. So t…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyOffspring010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyPopulationZoologyGeneral MedicineBiologyMating system010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPopulation densityArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionarily stable strategyBiological dispersalMatingGeneral Agricultural and Biological ScienceseducationPolygynyGeneral Environmental ScienceDemographyProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Behavior adaptation and selection.

2010

6 pages; The evolutionary approach to behavior is concerned with the evolutionary origin and adaptive function of behavioral traits. Like any other part of the phenotype, behavior can be shaped by natural selection to produce adaptations. However, behavior often shows large phenotypic variation and flexibility, and can be both – subject to selection and a major agent of selection. Therefore, the study of adaptation and evolution of behavior is a particularly complex one, involving a wide range of methodologies and techniques, including mathematical modeling, comparative methods, phenotypic engineering, quantitative genetics, genetic dissection, and artificial selection.

Flexibility (engineering)Optimization[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyNatural selectionQuantitative geneticsEvolutionArtificial selectionNatural selectionQuantitative geneticsVariation (game tree)BiologyComparative methodEvolutionarily stable strategyAdaptive behaviour[ SDV.BID.EVO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]Sexual selectionEvolutionary biologySexual selectionEvolutionary stable strategy[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisAdaptationAdaptationSelection (genetic algorithm)
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Quantifying male attractiveness

2003

Genetic models of sexual selection are concerned with a dynamic process in which female preference and male trait values coevolve. We present a rigorous method for characterizing evolutionary endpoints of this process in phenotypic terms. In our phenotypic characterization the mate-choice strategy of female population members determines how attractive females should find each male, and a population is evolutionarily stable if population members are actually behaving in this way. This provides a justification of phenotypic explanations of sexual selection and the insights into sexual selection that they provide. Furthermore, the phenotypic approach also has enormous advantages over a genetic…

MalePopulationBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionarily stable strategySexual Behavior AnimalGenetic modelAnimalsComputer SimulationSelection GeneticeducationGeneral Environmental Scienceeducation.field_of_studyModels GeneticGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyInheritance (genetic algorithm)General MedicineBiological EvolutionPreferenceGenetic architecturePhenotypeMate choiceEvolutionary biologySexual selectionFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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A mathematical model for the phase of sexual reproduction in monogonont rotifers

2000

Recently, the optimal sex allocation in monogonont rotifers is studied in [1], and, as a closely related question, the relative frequencies of the relevant types of mictic females. The authors focus on the evolution of the age at which young mictic females lose their fertilization susceptibility and they address the threshold age of fertilization that maximizes resting egg production. Assuming that a stationary population is achieved, with stable age distribution, they obtain their results, without knowing the stationary population. Our aim is to study this problem in the framework of the theory of nonlinear age-dependent population dynamics developed by G. F. Webb in [13], which is more ap…

Maleeducation.field_of_studyEcologyReproductionApplied MathematicsParthenogenesisPopulationRotiferaPhase (waves)Sex Determination ProcessesBiologyModels BiologicalAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)FrequencyStable distributionEvolutionarily stable strategySexual reproductionHuman fertilizationModeling and SimulationStatisticsAnimalsFemaleSex RatioeducationSex allocationJournal of Mathematical Biology
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On the evolutionary stability of female infanticide

1997

Territoriality among female rodents may have evolved as an adaptation to intraspecific competition for resources or, alternatively, to defend pups against infanticide. In order to evaluate the latter, we analyse the conditions that allow an infanticidal strategy to invade a population of non-infanticidal females, and the circumstances under which infanticide may become an evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS). Our game theoretical analyses indicate that infanticide has to be associated with some direct (cannibalism) or indirect (reduced competition) resource benefits in order to invade a non-infanticidal population. We also expect that females will primarily kill litters of nearby neighbors,…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationCannibalismTerritorialityBiologyIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Evolutionarily stable strategyAnimal ecologyAnimal Science and ZoologyAdaptationeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographymedia_commonBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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Mixis strategies and resting eeg production of rotifers living in temporally-varying habitats

1993

A dynamic model based on six differential equations has been developed to explore the control of mixis of rotifers living in temporally-varying habitats. The equations give variation rates of amictic females, three stages of mictic females, males and resting eggs. The model takes into account some constraints on mixis (e.g., male-female encounter probability and effort involved in resting egg production) and its predictions have been generated by computer simulation using parameter values from the literature. For simulation, a time-dependent birth rate function was assumed to account for changes in the environment, and several mixis patterns (i.e., moment of mixis induction and mictic rate …

education.field_of_studyHabitatEcologyPopulationModel parametersParthenogenesisBiologyeducationResting eegEvolutionarily stable strategy
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